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Finance people: A quick question...what is an appropriate asset/liability ratio?
I really have no idea. I would appreciate any input here.
Thanks Fat E |
Under 40% debt-to-income is good, 40-45% is getting up there, and over 45% is not usually considered positive.
I work for a financial services company, and that's our scale. Of course, mine is like at 60% ... MM ~~:sulk: |
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there generally isn't a clear cut number that says your net worth should exceed your liabilities by 40%, but ideally I think you'd want to have no more than 80% of your assets leveraged at any one time. Banks generally wouldn't want to exceed 80% of the value of their collateral on a loan, especially in the case of commercial loans. home loans are different because of things like mortgage insurance. but on a commercial loan, if you are borrowing say $60,000 to buy the assets of a business which are mainly furniture & fixtures and inventory or basically just the name of a business and the customer base then a bank wouldn't want to lend near as much as they would on say a piece of commercial property which has a more clearly defined value than equipment which depreciates far more rapidly than a building. I hope this helps, i really have no idea why your asking and am getting ready for bed so i'll forget this whole conversation by tomorrow. send me a private message if you want to chat more about it tomorrow. |
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